The Tempest (Vol. 29) | Further Reading
FURTHER READING
Bamber, Linda. "After Tragedy: The Tempest." In her Comic Women, Tragic Men: A Study of Gender and Genre in Shakespeare, pp. 169-91. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1982.
Examination of the ways in which The Tempest diverges from Shakespeare's other romances in its handling of the feminine.
Berger, Karol. "Prospero's Art." Shakespeare Studies X (1977): 211-39.
Influential analysis of Prospero's magic.
Bergeron, David M. "The Tempest." In his Shakespeare's Romances and the Royal Family, pp. 178-203. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1985.
Discusses the depiction of family politics in The Tempest and explores how the family of James I is represented in the play.
Brown, Paul. "'This thing of darkness I acknowledge mine': The Tempest and the discourse of colonialism." In Political Shakespeare: New essays in cultural materialism, edited by Jonathan...
[The entire page is 712 words long]
